Welcome to our first guest Nathan Stowe, who owns and writes for Manporium.com, The Luxury Blog for Men. Nathan discusses if and how cruelty free and responsible sourcing can be applied to luxury clothing.
L xx
What is Luxury?
Luxury is hard to define – certainly, if you ask three different people, you’ll probably get five different answers. This isn’t helped by the fact that the definition is changing every day – luxury is affected by all sorts of socio-economic macro-trends. What is luxurious today may not be considered so in fifty or even five years from now.
There are however, some consistent key-words surrounding luxury, such as ‘rare’, ‘exclusive’ and ‘expensive’. So, where sustainability is intended to be just that – sustainable – we find ourselves with a challenge. How can that which is forever replenished be considered rare?
Well, just because something keeps being replenished doesn’t necessarily make it freely available. Solid wood has always been considered as luxurious, and this is largely because it is a natural product that grows. Trees grow slowly. Some really slowly. So, to be sustainable, the rate of consumption must not outstrip the rate of the growth of the raw material. In this way, supply is restricted, which inflates prices and hey-presto, you have your luxury.
What About Zero Harm?
Zero Harm materials are more of a challenge. Leather, silk, wool, all are considered luxury products – but all involve the slaughter or mistreatment of animals. There are alternative materials from plants or synthetic fibres, but these are not generally considered as luxurious. Either luxury brands need to compromise on their pricing and thus profits and positioning by manufacturing their products with these Zero Harm substitutes, or there needs to be a change in the perception of the materials, or where the value in the products comes from.
Zero Harm Alternatives
But Wait! What if Zero Harm Luxury Makes the Problem Worse?
What is Luxury?
Luxury is hard to define – certainly, if you ask three different people, you’ll probably get five different answers. This isn’t helped by the fact that the definition is changing every day – luxury is affected by all sorts of socio-economic macro-trends. What is luxurious today may not be considered so in fifty or even five years from now.
There are however, some consistent key-words surrounding luxury, such as ‘rare’, ‘exclusive’ and ‘expensive’. So, where sustainability is intended to be just that – sustainable – we find ourselves with a challenge. How can that which is forever replenished be considered rare?
Well, just because something keeps being replenished doesn’t necessarily make it freely available. Solid wood has always been considered as luxurious, and this is largely because it is a natural product that grows. Trees grow slowly. Some really slowly. So, to be sustainable, the rate of consumption must not outstrip the rate of the growth of the raw material. In this way, supply is restricted, which inflates prices and hey-presto, you have your luxury.
“How can that which is forever replenished be considered rare?”
What About Zero Harm?
Zero Harm materials are more of a challenge. Leather, silk, wool, all are considered luxury products – but all involve the slaughter or mistreatment of animals. There are alternative materials from plants or synthetic fibres, but these are not generally considered as luxurious. Either luxury brands need to compromise on their pricing and thus profits and positioning by manufacturing their products with these Zero Harm substitutes, or there needs to be a change in the perception of the materials, or where the value in the products comes from.
Zero Harm Alternatives
Piñatex – Pineapple ‘Leather’
Manufactured from the fibres of pineapple
leaves, which would otherwise just be discarded and left to rot during the
harvest of pineapples, Piñatex can be produced in variety of different
thicknesses and colours. The
manufacturer is certified as a Vegan Fashion Brand by PETA.
Alcantara is a synthetic suede-like
material produced in Italy, by a single manufacturer. If you’ve ever spent any time in a sports
car, there’s a good chance you will have come across this material on the
steering wheel, seats or other interior trim elements. It’s soft, wears well, and offers good levels
of grip.
The latter is probably the best example of
a man-made fibre being considered luxurious – you tend not to see Alcantara on
cheaper products, and it conjures up all sorts of images of racing
heritage. The benefit of it being
produced by a single manufacturer means you can only get it in one place, and
as a result, pricing remains high. You
could see the same outcome for Piñatex over time.
So, let’s recap so far – we’ve got sustainability
sorted, or at least are on our way, and we have some credible zero harm textile
alternatives. Where does this leave us?
Well, consider this: Hermes Birkin bags sell for many tens of thousands of
pounds, but would you be able to justify charging the same amount for an
equivalent bag that looked like leather, felt like leather, but just wasn’t?
This is the challenge: The perceived value
of the product needs to shift away from the material (or at least, the type of
material), to the design, craftsmanship, heritage and even perhaps the zero
harm story; to justify the pricing.
“The perceived value of
the product needs to shift away from the material to the design, craftsmanship,
heritage and even perhaps the zero harm story; to justify the pricing.”
But Wait! What if Zero Harm Luxury Makes the Problem Worse?
This is all well and good – make a man-made
product rare, put the right story against it, make zero harm and sustainability
desirable, and you have solved your problem.
Well, yes, for luxury items. For
expensive items. For rare and exclusive
items. But suddenly, have we made the
problem worse? Have we made zero harm such a commodity that only those who can
afford it can have it – the net result being that the vast majority of people
can’t, and must resort to buying leather, wool and silk-based products because
in this hypothetical marketplace, they’re considered cheap because they aren’t
zero harm. You’ve turned the market on
its head, and incentivised the production of even more leather to cope with
this demand, because people can’t afford to buy polyester any more.
Of course,
this is just a bit of a thought-experiment.
A ‘what if?’. Man-made fibres are
generally cheap because they are easy to produce – produced volumes are high,
and as a result, the unit price is low.
This is extremely unlikely to change.
“You’ve turned
the market on its head, and incentivised the production of even more leather
because people can’t afford to buy polyester anymore.”
Ultimately,
however, the global economy functions on profits and money changing hands. Price is dictated by value, and if that
perceived value shifts, it’s anybody’s guess as to what could happen.
Nathan owns and writes for Manporium.com, The Luxury Blog for Men. You can follow him on Twitter , or email him.
Nathan owns and writes for Manporium.com, The Luxury Blog for Men. You can follow him on Twitter , or email him.
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